Yep, Maco does not do any prep work on their antennas and say so in their manual. The "rope" is not to hold the elements together. Its used to minimize the vibration in the elements when the wind blows. This vibration may fracture the aluminum tubing and destroy the antenna. Mosley includes rope in their kits also. The ARRL Antenna Book also talks about using rope in the elements. Its just rope.linearone said:Maco antennas...had a nice piece of "rf" rope. You know to hold the antenna together inside of it. also, when you get the antenna out of the box you can look at the ends of the tubing where they paid some drunk with a whizz wheel to angle grind down the ends... it looks nasty. Not saying this will affect the antenna but man talk about poor... and thin thin thin elements and boom. Reminds me of a TV antenna. oh and the fasteners were not stainless either.
The Jo-Gunn elements are much better to be sure. As I've stated earlier, their elements are double and triple layered which is where the strength and weight comes from. They also use large wood screws to hold them together. Yes, I said WOOD screws! The Jo-Gunn antennas are also absent of a coax connector which is usually the weak link in an antenna system. Just strip back the coax and bolt it right to the gamma tube and antenna boom.
If you need the strength and high power requirements, buy the Jo-Gunn. For the the other 95% of the operators out there, the Maco is plenty even though you will want to upgrade some of the hardware.